HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1906-04-13, Page 7'
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Irmo MOOTS ON OM* ' 034**, ISA A* VA 1 OW I" 4I4.*
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itoliat * 1414,11110000-114**Ps
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itkutatposa dial nit
Attlatitil taitaeommakat 1`0** tatogt " 14t4t tee'e444*, trett t the
Aitettt lAi **et Wealth et ow .0. ..riact"MiZtr "It 944 lt
*04 hie rfon-tosda ion OOP TO' RAAPEIt4ii Of woo
ee .miletten persons are, trenrefieg '10 tnet**4. 0: neeetting eendentilatte. *Veit pmainie yoursogi awed * pee Ot th0 001.0 0010ea :MU the tba
death itt `tetnere, tet tn. ver$ 11.01111 Wally consist 01 ,gitta tho.'14)0004. otrib.gro low koeg la f04'0040 tbroAlt. wire etreintril Val theta
ifetatet trbe first felinetal re* telreitYed, 000ntlibeten /Or the. nvin. the. engage; lunnoweyarel of en* rettei: I14eRie belle Of 1114 ROW WOOtt,
porta Deceenbee
PeoPki wee* In destitution, but, far *QM
Sertikeff better, Oonditions have become
woree, after Wend levelitliPtlinne
hee h0011 :00114 Wet it kend IttlitiOn
0403 rentleed 14 lb* tut eatrtietliti. Thena
ere -the deelitretirani Ot' Attlitir Reatt
itt the *Won ',Transcript,
The Opal** ara coning nehly to the
rWue Of Meir suffering fellow country*
mett. Out with; all teffeete rant a
Ian anon torti oi the Offering catt'bet
regebed. Graterteeleat tine --12:0W-4W.
aild eaarYniit .0Ut MOOR 01.4040
wOrth Of pienlie Werke iliftt elterY day
give emplogoent to Mounted* POOP
PeoPle, thelleands.ot eopeneeeeare
making contrIbUtiOkiel Wee rallith4
nun 40,0 yen, given by the Emperor,
end 1000 yen, •given, by• nut ,110,10}4,6*
itellwaY Company., to the Stogie Yett end
even sert, of do common people whom
the %mine haknet touched;
Not long ago * eaon ef, p-enaatbepie
W-aMeii-Or -YeatelifeMtu senteir 'WO
through the famine di:striet with 12e Yen
and #00 httoonos, to 0400. how best
the suttere.re could ha reached and re.
neved, Threllithout ber
• Clothing Wee eaSsed !tee by all tne
gpvernment officials, end tile tailroad
cOmpentes Oheeked tt es perorate! beg -
gage. The •Conditions whieh She Uncov-
ered Were eoPalling, and have pot been
P°13. IVAOSIY 10:01,01 rkieo. Para WOrin refer 10 the hiltieeinee (Weft en hilly` Of UtrOWII 400 these helte.
that stlgtthiod 4:414 411900114 P4014, Orthe Canaillina 041414104.. begitut the,,,..„1—t lleete th'em' The POO* 4/44
tow Opt AO AtlentiO and. otala It Oa 'Otedto., v4Irggsart looting a ,ot 40004.
Avert Alta otttldgeo 'horn baba PrOlit* gretehidg troio eatte tO WOO IOC *wit wh"4"0 "Atutos Itteaart9411'
into Wage relieve to situatteil. t044. pieta 4alta Wintee frantt G. :Caps zbachtastEld 1,59_Inet 04 -Oett
mug* to= ,to font goctuu,n3, nut 4410f' teenier; front Wawa en few ch,44.49 roll* reatfOr sowtoent mter the
eth/ 'Wbed. 434184431 14* *orig, $tattint Nova $eotik WI New whteh We served tIP tO WO
diettiet intYg. been )etight. te; brag straw .‘ cord 04.04 „ twOrld, Aq • Madit into newspapers
being eent to: Vetottetritt.. ht,Ohe Scheel limns* yeti look Olen ele'Ontenehl.1"44/4(k:4 *1It 1"*Ii414 "
eehildrell Poke :over. ooe honored big wag to eenne ten gweie,oe efekeee,„4.- 140 boat wood.putp, however, *made
yvewoot nwoeg taneudblhiser tozelwoOttol Oroirti. ochriot5t4salelierepo. areprio'hittoMberiittitlilitundanWerir-loteureethlihortr*Prxertriollnhothtewartvehr:
y ewe last November. Yet Wet etti .TwepaperW are pitting pulp, 'nut UP *to out Imo 044 axid pot Ins
bell) With eMiting feces and TesSoits ere to supply the pew or the great. Ict ans'eneW111°148 steel tea', whleh '"te
of the more pres.sing necessities os on, ing westwoi we, Ry tew elm ewe lids Werke On the wood as the StOnleelt
Wait front where. a, great pad ot our" te putp. The digereoee betweeo chin
neneeneeeneneene sone oge now cern% 11;14110tlitlie and Mechanical pillp Le
FORSAFETY OF WORKERS v_ Here °the neretan,.Afril__togiLtr tweet' shgrtTal:I:Oogloen dailerleorgstaple
r:taclt.raarld It:Ktru:Poraosraivuisuana Sett falend Caton; The chemical. pellp
1060 eillecist-10a. feet high; and- this
PREVENT ACCIDENTS. tenth tend skirt the wheat !telt, until h.,1
they loge themeelves in the extant woods o complete of Its kind in entetellea•
Many Devieee Seen to Pretext FiellPleYeee and vegralitien aa Washington and Ore-
heve tech 10041)110y postponed In favor est tienstitUenee Of EtneOpe. 'allee: Witte etuiltheirene acid and siteern.
eets Ot 011eneei Med Mee theee 01 On. WOrka toed, and finally digests ft In.
tenting the mean* of tife.
go On to tha 'west„ *linos to tha eating hteialona longer Pre end it moo a
MON_ LIF APPF.I4Nedaie In Weeds- regket.- And Allen-eWitch to the °alai al P III at Saatt Ste
sun. They take in the, Lake et the4kr PPOer'e - Thlet Oath Wed 1,0a
of the Rockies and titabittclae• 4
1•1.11•011.
From Fly -Wheels and ' fl%i'tavl:Ndt!trfliset7.earesurPseaSnsieeViKsndfleTtlyn,
' -
SaWs. e fifty, or sixty feet Uncle; a single lag
A permanent extabition of practical will load a car, and one tree cu n
' eennotljed in nor report. - appliances to prevent Oncidents te °Pee- boards. may make a train load. Tim -
In one village which she vielted The citore-bremachlites in factories has been her, Whieh will square two et three feet
headman Or "selletto" teld her ihat of established in Paris 'at the Coneervaton- and make a IN: sixty feet long, Ls
the forty-six families In the village iet des Arts et Metiers.. This extabitien spoken ot there as a teeth -pick and
Seventy were in want, and gave her a was officially opened ea.rly in December such tooth -picks are exported . all over
list of theM, Cateful, persona) canvas- by M. Loubet, President of the Repnb- the world:, Tins British Cethembla Um -
sing cientirtned all thet the sencho had Ito I ber belt is almost untouched. It has
told her by showing conditions worse In the exhifillicin are installed the red and yellow cedar, white and yellow
than even he wee Witting -to admit. more common machines found in too- Pine, red fir, rnaple and oak. It ia-.0na
ManY faMlIfeS had no blankets and tortes. The'machine.s are in motionomil cif the most valuable pieces et Woods
only thin and ragged' clothing; altnough a practical demonstration is. given daily left on the North American centinent.
the snow lay deep. all around, antticicles be an offichil ln charge. The various . WOODS ABOVE THE LAKES.
hung from the eaves ot the housee even machines have, been chosen by the ad- '
in the middle of the afternoon. Some ministration of the conservatoire as Flying back to the east let us look tor
had teo mats and hod only bUndles of tepresentative oT their class, and are a moaient at the woods beyond the great
Straw to help them to resist the cold. k S 1 Caret Hu-
- The focal wae insufficient and very
poor; a little rice flouri mixed with
leaves eand-daikone...aeitipattese- plant
very much like a fern, boiled with beans,
being ihe kind slee saw. Everything not
poLsonous was being utilized. In one
school flve children had. nix -lunch awl
five children could not attend at all be-
cause of kick of food.
SOLDIERS' FAMILIES SUFFERING.
Hew far the war was to blame for the
condition In this village it was hard o
judge, but five families of soldiers were
found which were pracUcally destitute.
In one of these the soldier was very 111,
and 1n two others the soldiers were
wounded, while in another the soldier
had but just, returned. One faintly con-
sisted of an old father and mother, a
wife and a little son to whom -the soldier
would never return. In one family,
visited in the afternoon, the baby was
A FRONTIERSMAN LEGION
.:LOCOMOTIVE. SOON TO GO
449.t.:,tne stort.kosu IVA
AttWitatt Italtraattot Ara Malay ta
Oltaatge AdtAttlitile*
Om* Or*.
Five years ago * rallread ePeretet
neinutetttling Miluence said: "la ten
ten years' time ik he Moat le dna
the UM* Um*
Ike east. - When Wind it will be on
the scrap beep, it will love beeit
pliteett nr the elocirle ntotOr,"
The murk Wee received with WK.
gven " railroad werutore who
letesew reeOliggin in motive power
thought the limit sheld4 be placed (A
LWOW Yearit, It WA •geterter of W cem
tury. The revolution meant so much,
Not, oftlY their VOW, Worn thia
count bo OA% OM a eomplete change
made in methods, treat eratettalettral
iiod organkatiOn, hut Influences Of pow.
er, which would itatura4 be 415terted
IQ a coothootme ot old way* and old
Methods. must be overturned. Yet hut
half of the period named by thie far.
seeing men MO umnred, antt the revs/In-
nen la In prOgreSe.
, ON NEW YORK LINES.
;Me preeefel eleetrifYlrig the rail-
reada centering at New Yierk Wider
way. Already ieepheti,raii of the Long
telend Rallread is being operated by dec.
rieity, while the tuner gt electrIlying
Other parts is beil Steadily lashed,
Sindlar work.is Dein &Me on the lines
ot Me New Yeti(' en New Haven. The
!operation of the New YOrk Central so
tar up as Croton is Only awaiting the
teritish Colurnient, same °notate
, collation of the terminal improve-
ORGAlen2ATION POSSESSES MANY men s in Manhattan. Though no pub-
lic announcement has been made of the
ELEMENTS OF ROMANCE 0 Met, it is well known that the Pennsyl-
vania contemplates the moving oP Ps
—
trains by electricity between Philadel-
Lord Lonsdale Is Chairman and Many rhla and New York when the tunnels
under the North River tire completed.
Notable Men Have Decided Nqw tho Erie takes a step io the same
to nein. , direction, while the Delaware and Hutt -
son is experimenUng with a new style
Probnbly no organizetion in the or electriq motor. .
world possesses elements of romance in
eo great a degree as this new legion THE WHOLE SYSTEM.
just formed In London England. its In the present outlook it would seam
object ts wholly patriotic and its Mem- as if the•only purpose was that of mot/.
bers are associated for the promotion t f Mg the seburban traffic by electrical
imperial interests in time of peace, and power. It is merely the first step in the
equipped with the most tmproved tip- • '
ron is an extension of the forests we had foi imperial defence in time of war. coming revoluUon. The other steps
pliances for the preventlort of accidents , in Wisconsin and Michigan. Fully one- The official definition of the term may not now be apparent to the general
to the operator.
_....one notes. nest,. 'of an tee _mange. tinted 0.1. the. Ames . Aire, Mae. -thalleenwiefroritiersman" .states it "includes men public, tut "they ere ceeitirly vielble to
hundred years old, and many have trained and qualified by previous com- railroad men. Already the New York
mente added to protect the operator
seen several centuries. They consist ef Witted military service, or by. working, Central has begun the preliminary work
improve rather than injure the appear -
white pine, birch end maple and other hunting or fighting in wild countries, of electrifying its • western division.
once of the machines. In every in -
hard woods, with a strip of spruce at or at sea, who for various reasons do , When both ends are operated by elec.
stance the safety appliances are graceful
are the north vast enough to make the woo(' not, or cannot serve in the existing mil- tricity it will be but a short time before
end sightly; at the same time they
arranged with the greatest poeible sim. pulp for the newspapers of generations itary forces of• the Empire, and who are i the same power will be applied to the
I licity and ec.onorny, and it Ls tapparent to come. Four million pine logs are not prepared by reason of tempera- T middle sections. When one road Is
that the improvements, though of great or vocation to submit themselves wholly operated by electric power other
h Ottawa and other millions go to 'he .10 the ordinary routine of military dis-e roads will follow. One road will not te
floated down evety year to this city of I meat
permitted to enjoy a monopoly of the
advantages resident in applied electri-
city.
emelt/ye, must add but a small per cent. Ereat lakes and across to the United , cipline except in the time' of war.
to the cost of the machine. A brief re -1 Stales. I Under such conditions the legion has
cite! of sortie of the more common ma -1, The Dominion is doing all lit, can to lalready gathered into its ranks men
chines found in the collection will give preserve the trees. On some of the whose collective adventures in all parts
public lands the regulations are noW i ct the world would, if set down on pe-
a comprehensive idea of the scope of the
exhibition and the general idea elabora- such that no trees below a fixed size ! per, make more thrilling and absorbing
ated. , can be cut. The timber is sold only I reading than any volume of fact or Ile -
when it Is ripe. If these arrangements Lion ever published.
FLY -WHEELS AND SAWS. are kept in force, they will give Ontario
EMIL OF LONSDALE CHAIRMAN.
Flywheels within the height of the a forest reserve of 40,000,000 acres,
operator are surrounded by high screens ohich will, it is estimated, bring in $30,- The General Council consists of ex-
cf substantial wirework. If the wheel e00,000 a year. perts-financial, military and judicial -
crying, a little one of three years of age is small and a screen impracticable the! Canada has set aside a number' of na- and representatives of all vocations, of
was wailing anti fretting and a -child of spokes of the flywheel are hidden by •tional parks. In two of Its Rocky the wilderness and of the sea. rhe
ten was just starting out toi try to beg light plates that make it impossible for Mountain reservations it has almose as chairman is the Earl of Lonsdale, Who
some rice -the last stage in a Jananese the clothing or ...person of the operation- much as we have in eIl our national himself has had experiences which fall
household, where begging Is seldom re- to become involved in the wheel. , parks, and in Ontario there tare 7,000,- to the lot of few men. His collection of
sorted to, even when stervation is an old Horizontal saws are entirely protegted Me acres of such reservations. The hunting trophies at Lowther Castle is
acquaintance. , by an ingenious arrangement serneMiat I oho Park on the- Pacific slope is forty supposed to be the finest In the kingdom.
An accompanying official said to the on the plan of the sticks of an ordinary miles long and flfteen miles wide, and , The. chairman of the Executive Coun-
mother, "Can't you stop that child's cry- , fun, and can readily be swung back- the Rocky Mountain Park, along the , ell, Sir Henry Seton -Karr, is a famous
ing?" "I couln," she replied, "if I had ward or forward to admit work of vary- line of the Canadian Pacific Railroad, is big game hunter and was one of the pia -
something to. give her to eat, not with- ing sizes. Ribbon or band saws are in- ' ninety-six miles long and forty-six miles . nears of that sport in Wyoming at a
out." Every family visited was given cased in angle pieces or practical Nee . wide. The Algonquin National Park, time when he was liable himself to be
enough to keep it for a month withe es wherever it is possible for the opera- In central Ontario, contrans 1,200,000 eunted by red -skins.
proper economy, an example of how tor to come in contact with the blade. acres, and northern Quebec has a na- Mr. M. H. De Hora's career furnishes
lifile is necessary -to relieve a. great , All gearing to lathes is enclosed, raid tional park of more than a million iind' cne of the most remarkable stories of the
deal of suffering in this frugal country, a practical and readily detachable cas- a half acres... i The Canadian govern- present age. One of his little exploits
as .the agent had started out with less ing over the end gears permits the meal guards its forests against fires was the cutting out of the battle ship
than $70 in money. - change of these gears In the screw cut- and pays half the wages of the flre Huascar from Peru, bui that Is by no
The "Foreign Committee tor Ftellef of ttng machines. rangers on timber lands leased to lurn- means the most exciting of his adven-
Famine in the North" has just made 'Emery wheels are closely Incased and Lumen.
public Us, thst report, and, in It four the onerator protreted from injury from 1 C,ariada has some of the greatest wood
things are especially impressive. First the dust and flying partictes. pulp forests on earth. North of the pine
of all it is noted that the difficulty ot Drills. planing or mortising machines belt -there is a strip of spruce and pop -
administering relief is very great, owing are closely prOteeted at en pares. and la.• which runs across the greater part
wotild be required on the part of the of the continent. It contains enough
to the large area over which the people Id weuld seem that a determined effnrt
are scattered and the deep snow which tiees of the right sort to supply the
prevents the use of jinrIckshas in dis- operator to secure injury. newspapers of the world for ages. In-
tributing the assistance. KEEP OUT SKIRTS. died, it could furnish enough to almost
In spinning and knitting machines paper the globe and leave some to spare.
In the one province of Miyagi nearly a
seecial attention is taken to protect lhe hi the Lake St. John basin of the Pro -
third of a million people are reported to
be in want; but with a view of anding vince of Quebec there is a wood pulp
out the most distressed the vice -gover-
nor recently sent out blanks to be filled
in by the soncho, giving details as to
the most destitute. It was found that
something over ten thousand peasants
required immediate help to keep them
from starving. The Committee of For-
eign Relief voted four thousand yen to
be used in this one province, although
that was a good parl of the total sum
that they had at that time colleced.
Members of the committee took lhis
sum and sometimes travelling over
roads covered with snow several feet
deep, delivered it in the form of cheques
on banking houses to the heads of the
counties in the none or the foreigners
living in Japan. The heads of the coun-
ties distributed it to the heads of the
villages, to be given by them in turn in
the
CHEAPEST SUITABLE FOOD
to the persons who needed it most.
Thus it has been arranged that the final
destribution shall be in the hands of the
soncho, since, even were it ansesable, it
would be impossible lo Ws -tribute 'n
person to the hands of the sufferers.
The various sonchos seem to have won-
derfully detailed information of the dr-
cuMstances of their people. They are
entirely trustworthy, and as the work
of relief must be in the main handed
over to them, this is fortunate. The fact
that they are accountable to the govern-
ment of the province insures the con-
tinuance of the work after the relief
committee has passed on to the next
town. They are elected by tbe people
over whom they rule, and hence, not
beirig petty officials frOm afar, their re-
lations with the people are paternal and
they can be made very serviceable in
relieving the want that they see among
their 'own friends, neighbors and even
relate/es.
The Second point brought out in the
remote was the magnitude of the work,
which has been suMciently touched on
by what has been said of its difficulty.
A.nother curious phase of the situation
Is the independent spirit and patient in-
dustry of the people in spite of their
suffering, • As to the conditions, in
skirts of female operators, all the run-
ning parts being tightly enclosed.
In general, one remarks that all belt-
ing, gearing and wheels coming within
rEach of the clothing and person of the
operator are well enclosed and protect-
ed by casings or screenings.
Reverse of the liability of the em-
ployer for all injuries to the employe,
more attention is paid to the protection
of the workingmen in France 'end
ether European countries possibly, than
ia America.
EMPLOYER IS LIABLE.
In France the law presumes that the
accident is due to the negligence of the
employer. A workingman receiving Canada ' has now thirty-nine mills,
permanent Injuries, preventing him which are annually turning out 275. -
from work, is entitled to an annual In- ItO., tuns of wood pulp, a large part of
ctime °thieve -thirds of ilia salary; for tem- which goes to the United States. I went
porary Ficapectty he is entitled to claim through a pulp mill here at Ottawa,
one-half of his salary. If the workman which was grinding spruce logs to pow -
dies from the result of an accident ills der, reducing them to pulp, and final -
wife is entitled to a yearly income ef ly turning them Into paper. It was
per cent. of her late husband's salary I snaking great rolls of newspaper, each
if she does not remarry, and a child re- tie big around as a hogshead, and It
celves fifteen per cent. of the deceased was also turning trees into paper bags.
workman's salary until arriving at the it is operated by the Ottawa River,
age of sixteen; if two children they re- which furnishes many thousand horse
reive 25 _per cent.; If three. 35 per cent.,
and if feta or more, 40 per cent.
It will be seen, therefore, how greet -
urea as large as the State of South Car-
olina on Which are now standing 100,-
C00,000 cords of pulp wood. A half -mil-
lion tons of pulp could annually be made
from that forest for an indefinite period;
and this is only a patch on the whole.
Sir Alfred Harmsworth, the proprietor
et the London Mail, has bought large
tracts of spruce timber in Newfound-
land, where he will ;mike the paper for
his many publications, and the Lloyde,
the owners of the Shipping Register. an-
other London newspaper of wide circu-
lation, have also invested in pulp for-
ests.
TURN LOGS INTO PULP.
power and runs sawmills, factories and
a er mils
The biggest pulp mills of the world,
ly It is to the interest of the employer su I am told. are those of the Lake Su -
in France to seek for and adopt safety perlor Corporation at Sault Ste. Marie,
devices in his factory. It Ls also n di- Canada. These mills make both me-
rect object to builders to make safety chanical and chemical pulp, turning out
to the operator an Important consIdera- a big product when In full operation.
non In planning of machines. The During my visit to them the mechani-
tures.
Captain Waiter tartan has been a
rrospeclor. gold miner, engineer, guide,
scout, hun'er, seaman, correspondent
and a Soldier.
FOUNDER OF THE LEGION.
The founder of the legion, Mr. Roger
Pocock, has the extraordinary record of
having filled thirty different vocations
In his highly adventurous life, includ-
Ina those of trooper, cowboy, seaman,
with the Yokahama pirates, captain of
a pack train and scout.
Mr. Morley Roberts, the distinguished
novelist, is another member of the coun-
cil. lie was a sailor the greater portion
r...1 his life and left the merchant service
r.s a master mariner.
Two of the greatest journeys of recent
t'mes were those made by Captain Har-
ty De Windt and Captain E. S. Grogan,
both of whom are in the legion. Mr. 11.
Bowmaln Ballanlyne is. an old cowboy,
and a South American "explorer, whose
name Ls Colonel S. B. SWIe, is known
far and wide in C.anadie is the hero
‘,1 remarkable feats of linuff which tam-
ed the fighting tribes of Western Can-
ada without fighting.
Generals Sir Reginald Hart, Sir John
French, Sir Edward Hutton, Sir r,
Maurice. Sir E. Brabant. Admiral Prince
Louis of Battenberg, Admiral Sir Percy
Scott. Sir A. Conan Doyle, Mr. Rider
(laggard and Sir Claude De Crespigney
are a few who are aiding the legion.
The British War Office has retie -ionized
the value of such an organizellon to
the Empire and has given Its approval,
and already, it is staled. that correspon-
(fence has elicited the fact there ere six
thousand men in different ports of the
Empire who are ready to enroll thetn-
selves in the legion.
GROWTH OF LONDON.
--
nook Issued Shows Startling Figures of
Immensity of City.
Scoop fa
Ibut hog %than USPed
To*
inthaSuoirolt.'
wo you 41;41 follow diraotione.
Afttr rubl)1041 on the 'op roll up each
T"'""-Pilicet immortal in ths water, and so ovay.
un tight oap
vvill do it, work in thirty to sbv minute*,
Yourolothe$ will be cleaner and wliker than %what;
in the old,fashioned way with bolter and hard
Equally good with hard or 14 water.
lenitite letiakore terettieen Terofteet
"PRESENTED AT COURT" by
the '''''WHAT FOODS ARE KU
•ee.1.4
YOUNG LARY TELLS OF WHAT SUE
!LAD TO GO TU.R011611.
now She Was Presented A Delight.
Cul GUmpse nehind the Scenes
ITS MANY ADVANTAGES.
If no other advantages were secured
to the travelling public than that of in-
creased comfort and cleanliness, the te-
volution would be justified. Exemp-
tion from coal dust and coal smoke
would increase travel. And that would
be the advantage gained by the com-
pany. This is not a' fanciful considera-
tion. Railroad operatives now declare
that inerease of comfort and conveni-
ence In their cats has been followed by
such increase of receipts as to justify
the expenditures entailed. But there
are other advantages in the way of in-
creased speed and economy of opera-
tion that commend the power to rail-
road men. ln the whole realm of direct-
ed energy, says the nrooklyn Eagle,
there Is not to be found such waste t s
is made In the application of energy
stoted"in coal. But 10 per cent. of that
energy is secured. Ninety per cent. goes
to waste. it es true•that as yeS coal mud
be consumed to generete electricity. But
the power thus obtained Is In much larg-
er proportion than when taken directly
from the coal.
WITIIOU'I' USE OF STEAM.
Of course, the Ideal condition will he
reached when electricity can be provided
without the aid of steam power. It will
not do, in view of the past, to conclude
that the discovery of the means by
which it can be done is not in the near
future. As It Is. however, the science
of electricity has advanced to that stage
when it is reengnized as the most cm-
nomical of efficients in power. The
Main thing Is that the revolution In
Motive power Is In progress. The next
floe years will he a memorable period
in the history of electrical propulsion.
REMARKABLE INVENTION
AN AIR ENGINE WHICH MAY KILL
THE COAT -TRADE.
ot Court Lite.
The happiest moment of my life catne
when I was told by my mother that I
was to be presented at the Court ot King
Edward and Queen Alexandra, writes
a pretty debutante In London Answerit.
We et ouce began to make prom -
lions for the great event, and these are
on no inconsidemble scale.
WHA'e "DREAMS OF DRESSES" COST
`The neoessiti•y werdrobe Is no small
minter. A enuple Court dresa by Peyote
will oost unything from $75U to $1,0110,
net iticlUding lace, which may be fata-
lly heirloom above price. The debu-
tante's bouquet tnay ittclude $125 worth
of wetly orchids and hothouse bloon)s.
As to gloves, ilie regulation twenty;
four -button Court gloves will cost $5 or
$12.50 a mute at Wool., in a Bond Street
shop, and the aimed shoes cost $25 a
aPluliors.ved at eauh Court, and about five
Only --two hundred "presentations" are
hundred "attendances." No lady not
officially connected with the Royal
Household may "uttend" more often
Man once in three years. •
My mother's name und my own bail
been sent in at the beginning of the
year, and in, due course, une utorning,
we received the severely plain cards
of invitation bearing the date of the
court we were to intend. Of course, we
knew the "dress regulatIons"-Court bo-
dice well off the shoulders; three white
plumes for the debutante, distinctly
showidg on the head from the front;
and a train at least lour yards.long. All
this information was sent with the
cards. The so-called "high". bodice,
which is in reality a square -cut, low
one, ls only permitted if one sen pro-
duce a medical certificate mewing one
is lit delicate health.
One would not think a white dress
would take long to choose; but 1 know
mother and I fairly lived in th,e
og ids oaf u totchrue 1, Cwhuort Ind vreasil:
Fnraeisiselry e sa n
ably sat upon our timid suggestions and
nipped in the bud our shy preferences,
THE ART OF TRAIN MANAGEMENT.
When the materials, trimmings, flow-
ers were selected, anti a lujigish %Memel
had elapsed, we were "tried un" -at tIrst
the rough, so to speak; and at long
length in all our completed glory. My
r,own looked deliciously pure and decep-
tively simple. My ornaments were
peurls, und mother's diamonds.
Such chinks and crannies of time es
we had left from the dressmaker during
this period of preparation were more
than filled up with minor engagements,
such as those with the huireiresser, the
Loud professor of deportment, and,
above all, consultations with my "social
godinother"-the great lady of title who
was to "present" me. The deportment
man rehearsed with me the needful curt -
rot, which was to be accompanied by a
pegullur sidelong, sliding step, which
6els you across the room without turn-
ing your back to anyone.
Our professor of deportment also
'taught me how tu manage illy train
with skill and how to keep my balance
1.t my high -heeled shoes un highly
polished fluor. Fur there in a trililirn
el Buckingham Palace about a tall awl,
ward girl of high ran,k whu caught her
heel in her dress when deseending the
grand staircase, and rolled from lop to
bottom like a mummy, Isope,lossly in.
volved in her gorgeous satin train!
When the great day Used dawned ive
began dressing immediately after diii•
ner in the evening. Everyone seemed
anxioue to assist in dressing me.
A crowd had assembled to see us start.
fondly Imagined it was an admiring
crowd; hut I goon knew hettiir. Even.
toady we entered St. James'a Park,
and fell Into line among the niiles
Carriages that stretched along the Mall.
Ilere, too, crowds were asaembled. anti
lor °vet' an hour we wore entirely at
the mercy of the people who gazed in
et the windows and criticised us most
cruelly. considering our entire helpless,
ness. Indeed. we were not sorry when
our carriage dashed through the rode);
the Palace, and drevi• up before the main
entrance.
arIANNERS "UP WEST."
' AND STILL ALIVE.
Queen Alexandre's lovely face flashed
a sweet smile et me, whilst KIng Ed -
Ward Welted down front his threat() with
all the good nature end kindly tact and
eyrimethy for widen he is famous tao
world osier. The "kissing hands" over,
I began my tremendous elaborate seri.
es of curtsies, wondering at my own,
skill In avoiding my voluminous train.
I thought they would never end; but at
last felt my train being unceremonious-
ir rolled up, and, it seemed to me, fairly
hung at my heed.
By good luck 1 caught It before it cap-
sized my featherei, took a long breath,
and realized that'll was all over, and I
was sUll alive!
•••••••••••••••••1111
PREVENTION OF SENILITY
•
FAMOUS PIGYSICIAN WHITES ON
TRE LENGTH OF LFE.
Sir James Crichton Brown Says We Aro
Entitled to One Hundred
Years.
Sir James • Crichton Browne, M.D.,
LL.D., etc., the Lord Chancellor of Eng-
land's visitor in lunacy, writes as fol-
lows on the length of !tureen Ille in his
book, "The Prevention of Senility,"
Every man is, I think, entitled to Ns
century, and every woman to tt century
and a little !nom, for women live longer
than men. Every child should be
brought up impressed with the obliga-
tion of living to a hundred, and should
Le taught how to avoid the irregulare
'ties that tend to frustrate that laudable
all4'boitilenrigthen as web as to strengthen
the lives of the people is the object of
preventive medicine. Certain great mea-
sures that Ile beyond its scope are llrat
cf all necessary if we could prolong the
days of the masses of our people, Re-
gular employment must be secured and
poverty diminished by our statesmen
and economists, so that we may no
longer have amonget us thirteen millions
on the verge of hunger and dying in
multitudes
BEFORE THEIR -TIME.
If old age is to be utlained, a good
'Voile in life roust be given, and hence
the importance of these question.s as
Infant feeding and milk supply. If it is
to be reached by a proper proportion( f
wayfarers In Sound eondition, we must
reduce the prevalence of those infectious
diseases which carry off so many of the
young, anti often cripple where they do
not 111 and we must see that our chil-
dren have a sufficiency of food, and a
sufficiency of teeth wtth which to etit 11.
If It Ls to tie wisely pursued, we [Mat
foster the self-respect and arrest the de.
generation of our people by giving them
'accent homes, sand promote their physi-
cut development by affording them fa-
(1111,1elecsuitionrrlyexceierseli
rsaeble It Is that we should
warn the nubile against those causes of
Premature senility which operate with
disestrous effect when childhood Is over.
I nrii not prepenred to Indulge in any
general denunciation of alcohol, but
there can be no question that excems
et It does ninke Mon old before their
1:tne. It Induces over-extitation iind ex•
laitislion of the nerve -cells, and also \rim:.
'intim paresis and arteritfrachlenisis
!s the Win tenter,. hi pathological se.
1.1ilv: anti it P. esoecitilk ant to do this
if indulged in al time when the tisnues
ere tippi•oaching the natural Hind of
New invention Will Propel a Locomo.
tive or Vessel IVithout the
Use of Steam.
Arrangeineols are now being made in
a greater revolution than that which
England to test a new type of engine,
which, If It proves sUccestiful, may cause
which resulted from the disrovery of
the steam engine or of the application
el electricity to motive power,
The patentee is a Lancashire man,
who has aire,ady achieved sorne success
as an inventor. This new production lie
describes as a triple economic air engine
anti if the inventor can justify all Iiis
claims the business of the coal miner
will be practically gone, tIS far as indus-
trial requirements are concerned.
Summarized, the claims for the new
engine nre na follows: -The economic
ail engine will save the use of coal and
French machinery builders have already cal works only were going, and the out- The Immensity of London is well 11. all cost of fuel; it will take the plrwe of
brought safety In machines to a high put was 100 tons per day. A hundred lustrated in a volume just issued by the Steam, which will not be required to
degree of Perfection, The machines tens, however, gives little idea of the London County Council entitled «A keep the pressure of Mr constant; IL will
found In the conservatoire exhibition amount of paper made. It takes about Statistical Abstract for London, 1005.'1 DRIVE A LOCOMOTIVE,
are machines actually on the market a cnrd of wood tie make a ton of pulp, 11 is an amazing compilation and shows propel a ahip, work a mill forge, &c.,
and are loaned by the manufacturer% and a ton. If the roll which weighs that that the British metropolis still holds the withdut gsing either gas, water, coal,
.......___+.--it I were spread out like a carpet, would first place among the greatest cities of electricity or ull, and It will entirely pro.
THIS WAY TO FORTUNE, PLEASE! I cover any city pavement to the length i vent smoke.
the world.
of three and a half miles. I The rapidity of the growth of London I The economic cylinder will be more
Work done is the criterion of ability; The pulp comes out in the shape of a during the last century is shown by the powerful than any other type of cylin.
not promises, not boasts. cardhnard two yards wide, rolled tip feet that while in 1801 the population der of equal diameter; it will saVe thr
Accept every experience as an educe- Just eice =nem.
is there.
tor. Leak for the lesson contained; it
it M several centuries 'since Shakes -
FROM TREE TO NEWSPAPER. islies8asi 1,114.644, it had risen in 1901 to use of large boilers and not more than
ii.„ r..402„p. ir idivethier;se92881.xoosanhdouasehst.111 mil. two will be required for large works.
Don't Id your work end with think -1 peeve found Nothing is more impressive to ail I With two or more boilers filled with
Mg and talking. Act. If you get an 1
visitor lo London than the enormous il
compressed air up to the pressere 0,
idea, try ft out to a conclusion. Tongues in trees. books In tbe 'lining ulred In each boiler the PCOIKIIIIIC c.v.
pensity for cheap locomotion Is strik-
volume or the traffic. Londoners' ender will keep up the pressure of air,
Pro' '
Talk to the point. Don't waste time brooks
and reported on they are pitiable iti the , The man who, In a lowly position, thing. ingly indicated by the vast number uf 1 if set to work.
scores of villages that have been visited on preliminaries. Sermons in stones and good In every -
tramways and omnibuses. Of course sure steam boilers the weer and hia r
In locomotivea anti other high prea-
eXtreMe. There are able-bodied men gives proof of zeal and ability, is al -
Clothed In ragged, thin garments, who ways the man who later Is found nevi,- It remained. however, for our age to the tramway and omnibus atatistics for
have to face piercing winds and snowa flying a remunerative position of trust make these tree -tongues speak and to 1904 do not adequately represent I hr
to hring in from the mountains the
and responsibility. preach their e.ermons to all the world.
completion of the new tubes new electric
ra c 0 e pr sen ay, es since the
Coal and wood, on the price of whiell ! Work is not an end In Itself; simply
labor their thinly clad families are try- , I fell that as I went through the 11
ear tracks have been opened. Thera
a meahs to an end. A humble position pulp mill watching the Machines yan
Ing to elm out a Miserable exIstenee. should be utilized ap an opportunity to newspapers out of saw logs. Tea were then 201 miles of trame ay lines
There tire mothers giving their very prove merit for a higher post. spruce timber is cut in the forests dor. oven, and during the year 557,9t7.840
Uve tO keen their babies warm, there To do your best is simply a matter of Mg the winter end floated down the passengers were conveyed, while 21;t8..
' met .exposede to stinging blasts that feting justice to youreele to refuse to rivers to Lake Superior and thence 965.214 passengers travelled on the two
leftist tepidly thorten their lives. There de so is to hide your light under a. brought to the Sault. 1 principni omn Mee companies' vehielea.
are Wien cultured old raen and women bushel. which others leave neither thne The logs are ot various diametera. I The letters, book packets, etc., deify -
who Iroftirriler dap were in comparative i nor inclination to lilt.
coition, but now are reduced to phy- Somelimea a mnn mny (Ind hiimielt Those worked during my slay were a evert by the nostm
foot or a foot and a half thick. The 091.000, nnd 28,244,000 telegrams were
en amounteil to 1.101, -
t ical deatniellort tbat no werds can de. engaged upon work whirh he letrace 1 ark was taken off by planing machines; despatched.
scribe. There are children barefooted In (and perhaps rightly thinks) nffords ho and thee were carried on endless belts An interesting idea el the different
the tInCne Oehotte seoutty clothing and . scope for hie real abilitlea. ere L9 ft tn the mill. All the machinery wile
pitched taCeS tell the sad tale of only tendency under such eireurestnnem to moved by water and the books really
one Meld a day aed that Of strato and rerferm Mr/ ditties in prefunclorv men- fleeted in the rimning brooks on their
way to their readers.
The Mills in which these lop are
ground are about eight feet In diamet.
er ahd not more than eight feet high.
Each hes a great grindstone in it.
against Which the lop are pressed by
Maehinery Ite teeth way that tney are
rradorilly Verized as the stotini trove
ftround et ti rate of f00 revolutione
tettl tit danced levee in -which te ranted
rice Donn, for MI5- is the
lite 10 *Web 6 large part of Japan is
' Winged.
)1101tAL Tips STRAINED.
Undo. such strains moral Iles are
weekening. Even mothers ire known
to leave tinth* atarving children/ Ociver
t1t tlIttiOtnitlfr. Nteii desert their fonts
• eicrldrcolle numbers. nut, anteing
all EA 040 *wickedness there Is a
ner. Why? ft Le by the perforritened
of veork, end not by the class of Work
that tbility Is measured.
CHINA'S BIG tintrglt.
The longest bridge in the World is the
Lion bridge. neer SeugOng. China. ft
exteride five and a nitarter neffee ever lift
erne of the Yellow Sea, and it LI attplairt-
ee 11,10 huge stone &Att. The rosdk
way is seven feet above the watet, and
endomd in ad lift neirevork.
aer ritinnte.
Mild Ulla
the alit. in
tl
d sm
0
lot
g.
wane grinds off the
to the water ineide
it cranes otit 11 looks
sourcee of London s wealth may be
gathered from the pose annual afare.lsi,
ed value of the income tax in 1904,
house% etc., amounting to £45.055,&51
(8225,r/11255e trades and profeasione be-
ing 474,806.453 (1374,042,265). and the
profit of public companion, and ether
interest and mato amounting to £143.-
534.555 (3717,672,775).
Ethal-"1 rather like !hot young Dole
Ile hag n good Orin tnouth raid
chin." Myrtle-"Goodneesi ilae to
t kissing you. tcor
rens ern e. t enlist/
fires, the rice of dirty water. and the
It h I te
pressnre, all timing n tendency 1,, pull
thern pleeen_and NIIISP serious relit,
round the rivet holes and oilier parts
r( the hollers. This weer rind tear will
nvoldtel by the me of the nir meow
While thin remains to be pre%
the doing away with the use of coal in
smelting appears to be
AN ACC.OMPI .ISI t ED FA( r
Mr. J. Corbin Weld. Repute Govern, r
el the Canada Company. who ia now in
London. says that he had pist reeened
information of en Important expeimient
which resulted in proving that smettmg
vvould be succeaefully nctileved by ewe.
Welty.
The extierimente were mnrie, ntb
a hodv of men seeking tn float a roo,
many. hut nt the expense of the
goverment with a slew of the d..,el .p
Menl of the Iran ore Industry in the no-
te rto dietriet.
Ile hail reeeived Infra -inn tinn tent re
needle of the exeerirnenin w.,re &Mu,
enuelusiye. end 'bat the treat.i..
,1 ore tw e/selrlelly mull! prolltaht,
end lueratively Corded cut.
To my terror we svere invited into a
side room [WTI! the lioyal dresser8 in•
apeeted ns lest precaution.
r asset! muster, fortunately, and then
trooped with the crowd up the grand
staircase. Boll -way up we pa,sed one
rt the Queen's tingeii, who took from
me one tif ray 1,1015 Card,. at the Vitra'
lane shooting a lieen glrinee tit me 1,,
,ee If I were dresied "according to rogiii
lations."
A barrier of velvet runes rur
ardoon from the one next in 1110`
and as the latter emptied, this harrier
\\ as raised by twn gigfinhe idlirem in i
the dai.2111111 uniform hf the First Life- j
gunrda. The minute the barrier \\as'
rinsed we nli throunh in a (Oil- •
tonne henp with that Insane desire to ,
UM PROPER mar MR SUOMI
MIS WK.
•••••••
London Physlatogist Caves I.Jet et
Scala an4 Meade Reatlag
Dirt.
Ono of the most eminent pliyidole.
gists In England. speaking In hie Lan.
tton home to representative ot the
belly Mall expreeeed pleasure at the
wonderful awakening of interest among
thc general public on the subject of
what to cat.
%Vhat busy nten and wotnen, he said.
want to know is; "What foods shad I
eat to give me that sustained vigor ot
Lody and mind absolutely naCeesery
enable me to keep my place In the 111#0
pressure lite of modern' dikter
The subjoined list contains foods well
suited to the nuttlUon of adults be tWe
climate, tine they may be combined in
the most varied ways to *neat the needs
of the consumer --
Rich In carbohydrates (ratted, build.
Mg) cow's milk, cabbege, peas, wheat,
maize, carrots, rico, potatoes, aPPlee.
rising from 140 In cow's milk to 3,000 Us
apples.
Rich in tabs (heat energy), tat pork. die
yolk of egg, tat beet, cow's milk, maize,
rice, carrots, cabbage and corn. (
Rich in albumen (the greatest of nutrt-
thes), milk, flour from cereals, ineceate
era, maize, peas and bread, vermicelli,
savoy, cabbage, wheat bread, rice, rye
broad, white bread, whole wheatmeal
bread, black (rye) bread, potatoes, car.
ruts, lenifis, bran bread.
RICE PUDDING BEST.
The ordinary dinner menu yields ap.
proximate nutritive value somethaln
the following -
THEW EreCTION,al.
WhiihiNer tends 10 I timinish disease is
conducive 1,, littieevity, hut In our en.
desvor to promote it we 'mist have re-
vnrit to montal 11.4
hygiene. A great deal or nremsior,, de.
irline in force iind energy Is due 10 over.
!use of the brnin and nervous system.
In% McLane Hamilton snvs that Ameri-
cans break down et an miler lige Bum
, Europeans, esiaa.ially from nervotni ell-
' inertia and he altrihilten this In their
struggles for the raphl rt
enIth, hi the rompelllion and ambition
'1.ef. over oiling. insuillei.
,rn1 iixerelsri and luxuriOns living gen•
largely stimulated hy agita•
tionid nev...tinpers, to the worrie, and
\ of taudriesa 1,1 Which men im•
nierse them,elves without recreative re
If we lire to lower otir death rate and
rowed,. 0111 lige we must return sim•
'wily and tranquility of life.
NutrIUVe
Value.
Soup, chiefly water, merely a stl.
mutant . . . Q0.40
Fish, white, chiefly waier goat
Entree (lean beef) • • • • .• •• ••
faint (leg of mutton) PAM
Vegetables, cabbage, carrot*, Po'
tutees ea.os
Sweets (rice pudding) 77.53
kink 12.0t
\elk of egg ...... 48,01
A ppies 13.01
Tea, coffee 00.00
it will be seen that the ideal luncheon
might consist, as the late Mr. W. E.
Gladstone often wished that It might, al
rice milk pudding made with eggs, fot
this is the most highly nutritious diet
known. The drawback is its failure to
tickle the palate -in all other mewls
11 is nearly perfecL
Lean meat beef, or mutton, eggs,
milk, the principle vegetables and fruits
are the materials tor a properly bae
anced meet. Well cooked, well mute
cated, consumed without additloa el
liquids of any kind, they should inane
lain any person in perfect bodily awl
mental health to old age.
EDUCATION AND BURGLARY
Methods of English House -breaker Have
Much Improved.
L'ducallon, says the Head Constable of
Livserpool, England, in his annual re,
port on the city pollee, wieth has just
teen issued, c•ertainly has had one ef-
fect upon crimes of dishonesty in that il
has to a certain extent eliminated per-
*mai violence as arciassury circuit*.
stance. Mita ut violence only *add to the
tiangers uf the burglar 8 Oilers enter-
1,1ise, end education, introducing bettel
ita u uni, as tri the honest work.
iiitin, hes enabled him to avoid them, et.
Bier by a more educated study of &taint
ur by changing the character of his
(Armin from that of larceny to that of
fraud. Either course decreases his dan
ger, and the latter generully increases
his prollts---swindlIng, whetelier it be by
means uf a lying prospectus, a mislead-
ing trade description, an appeal (dr a
togus charity, or any other Nine giro -
tenet] Is both safer and more Iteelitahle
than stealing a man's cash and salii•
ablea by breaking into tos 110USIO or
knock ing h im on II le h.. . Tereenel
honesty and professional yr trade tre
ilitIon seem under the -.tone uf modern
ridmiettlion to afford lean pisdeidren 1,,
. the rights of properly then they did
pars ago, and sotnething more is wunt•
HI, if the limiest and dishonest are to
compete life on anything likr equal!
tet nis.
miNuisowl".6 scut 04E11.
New Style of Vessel Added le the
II I Na(i,
'I te gourd...A.1.4ring warship in tiw
11111 Is the small er,m.er lphi.
genet, wpm ti Just be. e,,ro,erted ,n•
It. mine sow,tig VI'S-WI Along either
sid4; 111 tier itii..k rire
raod III numerous subunit,
ine 11111IPS ;ire .1u1,11, bhree hnei ‘,1 rail
L over the vesiol R stern, the
miner* being dropped oserboard from
irwm in; ain, steams the introdu,
iien of a mine-slwing ship inh, the [int -
l..' first whleti griverns all crowds. ';harp ish fleet In an fittiVnt lin.Jertriken
t'hows giive sly digs. lewelled hrsceipig n• a conteepienre whit?, o.1.. learned
scratched unmen*If . flowers and tom. during the wn r In the Far East, nil
pers were lost, and we atruggled coo iden Is that Me Mil v...tild 111.1e
slantiv in %pile of the solstitial releiLe et
the officers "Quietly. If you please: Gen
115:. ladies,"
KISSIN(3 HANDS AND CURTSEYS.
\xi\ appryarhod the fetal d rw v
to 'nine charm. I a olher n irrow al.
LOYAL TO HER FATHER.
Young Highland Woman Would Not
Disclose Her Affairs.
A yoking I lighland woman ri4ined
Nair:hew/Ai has elected to go to prison
ruttier Bum disclose the affair. hei
decen,ed father. The case ar a remark
utdo bile in the legit annals of 4,..01
pia:1111k, a. MI many lt,etii are who are di-
( owil syropallitui with her In her
ti and WIlfi fief ba tie;
George Ithickenne was furnititre
ea ler at Sitonthavrri, Kim an li neshire
Ms daughter Wt14 todered to, Ow sheriff
1, hand her father .1 heitks to the tra,
hien of the estate. She refused to Am
lhe sheriff warned fair Out disobete
(Lnre of snob rin onler was a serioub L
fen,e, and an% a. her six days If) consider
Mr position further. It wan plainly or,
els far mere ems bvply teen CQ111,1 e derstood that If 5110 still refused to Of.
done by steam lams+ si. up the books she sticol,1 be Imprhoned.
At the end of nix des e she WWI as ob
feel VI: ill Pre Wilit Nte4,-; stinale.ae before, and the neater became
embarrassing, because noteely eould be
fiAin,1 molting to take het' to Prillt31.
1..‘ontually the dieriff und. r officer
entered the ectert. and with groat (MU-
( Lilly u.as peratiadrd ,tn undertake Me
ouly Accompanied be a WOM011 Ob.
tentlant. Miss Mackenzie was ihen cau.
%eyed to the prison in Aberdeen.
we. fell into single 1110. and nn officer V. hen the Australian abOriUltIP 15 push-
y 1 end 51111 lind no other game
1nr rt‘ \r`:: ;;;Tnnt:
I.ow ninny members of the Royal Frini. eit trnil istri,S,I.,i,flItnenitiialq..37;t(g„;.7.11gif.A4t1
ed. lind ..1 rehred. 11,14 (set made nII;t7I'lat!itatrt' tip 0.-
i critt.rn.rte 1(,,frripsiire,,nort.p It; ut•t1 pCii:ireetr,iti. I aY:i,ett.,1,:a
(hese, and. Slot ,t.Ing MrA 11 niniinS .he
ramie one "kissed hiindq" only If her !lir,
I landies. \\.,th tough forked %lick In his
r14;r11n4e' ev'sseersP 1P1ar7etnnkt apnlaeler no.nnPe th,"1171,1 1;5)5 8rpl.r";rint vIvhil",:t4hen
riirhoed.
Wrill4n1 rind wnited. hilt sudderee (reeve surpriqo ,1 ,„ Ind ell;
, \Alien he runs r• earn, if h..
tt n oidden 1,1,,w ,.1 hi‘t stir!. he
rilmo.d without warning- my train
was deftly Intim off mv arm and apread
out in all Odning glory. I
. wonder.
Vfl C11,1.« if nit three wereen rind (.111.
r Ala credit bear mv thumping heart. It
r•on,p11 Ithe one r,f those nIghlmarrin In
ti inrid tv1111 is shor vim rind vour
rob: r\fusn mo% Meehar.ienIK 1
,regor.it my promote.. pink MM. pilded
11, 1.01 btio , and .-,
i,1 n roonci'mue mirror (al Inv
.41 nod .1 'V of mnimilloent giante in ie broken
,..riet nod ...eel 'el the rieht, forntine
,4 1111 1110.r driltAll PIVOTAP1.
n fr, 1,11 Moir tbe errant, "r' re" v 11" ".". titt""" 3"Y in -
.,1 •ei teem rev tr.•.4.11rie hrand. nrin ' Mr' heffein• hes
ko a girl in n dr* om I beard mg ntienniel under 11 all the LIMP.
smalls mir 11. ei. making 1, leow tug.
5,11U or iihisilmg lipe.
'ewe' the cloak., I id, :hi head out of 'he
bole And pvt14 111 nn imitnnt 11.0
Pelted raleti desc.inds and ?Iva, 11 to the
ground by tee ne. rind the black (et-
hos,. seolny it 11, ,r/.1 th0 Lend so tent
if rannot hite it out of the
I nle. and either sfl !lead .41 ,r
t,olin,h, It fin MI ground lin Its hack
Aid
FILeNCFee LefIGEST CLOCK.
The svorlia of a clock glade for the
ea led rn I of St. Gerv nee d'A era= hea
, eigh 2 tons, there are five sets of wheeia
I end the houre aro etruck on a hell
weighing over 0 tons by a clapper of
2t, tbs. For the quarters and the Car-
illon there are twenty-two other belLs
ranging from 13 cwt. lo 2 tone. There
are four faces to 11119 clock, which Is the
lergest in Franco.
Mrs Nagget; "Weil, 1 RUM I have a
perfect richt to my opfintine." Mr. Nag.
gel • "Certainly' you beet, My dear.
And if you ally kept them to eralreeit
on one would ever queallen GAP dee."